European Review, Vol. 21, No. S1, S123–S126. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Academia Europæa 2013. The online version of this article is published within an Open Access environment subject to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license ,http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/.. doi:10.1017/S106279871300015X The Essence of Morality ANTHONY KENNY St John’s College, Oxford, OX1 3JP, UK. E-mail:
[email protected] There are three elements that are essential to a system of morality: a moral community, moral values, and a moral code. There cannot be a purely private morality any more than a purely private language. The moral life of the community consists of the shared pursuit of non-material values: this is what distinguishes morality from economics. This pursuit is carried out within a framework that excludes certain types of behaviour: it is this that distinguishes morality from aesthetics. Moral laws are created by the moral community in a way similar to the way in which grammar and syntax are created by the linguistic community. There are three elements that are essential to morality: a moral community, a set of moral values, and a moral code. All three are necessary, and none on its own is sufficient. First, it is as impossible to have a purely private morality as it is to have a purely private language, and for very similar reasons. Secondly, the moral life of the community consists of the shared pursuit of non-material values, such as fairness, truth, comradeship, freedom. It is the nature of the values pursued that distinguishes morality from economics.